This is how big Hurricane Florence is. Hint, the eye of the storm is the size of Toronto

Hurricane Florence, a Category 3 storm that officials are calling a “monster storm,” is set to pummel the U.S. East Coast.

On Wednesday afternoon, Florence had maximum sustained winds of 215 km/h and was on a trajectory that showed its centre most likely to strike the southern coast of North Carolina by late Thursday or early Friday, the National Hurricane Center (NHC) said.

More than one million people have been ordered to evacuate the coastline of the three states, while schools and factories were being shuttered.

Florence is rated a Category 3 on the five-step Saffir-Simpson scale, and Jeff Byard of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) warned residents that it would bring “a Mike Tyson punch to the Carolina coast.”

WATCH: Hurricane Florence — trajectory of storm changes

So just how big is the storm?

Global News Meterogolost Anthony Farnell predicted that the eye of the storm is around 40 kilometres wide. To put that in perspective, the length of Toronto proper is 43 kilometres. So the storm’s eye is nearly as big as Canada’s largest city.

Florence’s wingspan is around 600 kilometres, Farnell said (note that the storm is constantly changing in shape so the numbers are just estimations).

If you drive from Toronto to Montreal, it’s around 541 kilometres. So Florence’s is wider than that distance.